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Sanin told his friends he was going abroad, but he did not say where exactly: the reader will readily conjecture that he eneral extension of railways, on the fourth day after leaving Petersburg he was there He had not visited the place since 1840 The hotel, the White Sas standing in its old place and still flourishing, though no longer regarded as first class The Zeile, the principal street of Frankfort was little changed, but there was not only no trace of Signora Roselli's house, the very street in which it stood had disappeared Sanin wandered like a nised nothing; the old buildings had vanished; they were replaced by new streets of huge continuous houses and fine villas; even the public garden, where that last intervieith Gerown up and altered that Sanin wondered if it really were the saet infor! had passed since those days No one to whom he applied had even heard of the name Roselli; the hotel-keeper advised him to have recourse to the public library, there, he told hiood he would get from that, the hotel-keeper owned he didn't see Sanin in despair made inquiries about Herr Klüber That name the hotel-keeper kneell, but there too no success awaited hito the position of a capitalist, had speculated, was made bankrupt, and died in prison This piece of news did not, however, occasion Sanin the slightest regret He was beginning to feel that his journey had been rather precipitate But, behold, one day, as he was turning over a Frankfort directory, he came on the nae and drove to the address, though as this Von Dönhof certain to be that D&ouht Dönhof likely to be able to tell hi man catches at straws

Sanin found the retired entlenised at once his adversary of bygone days D&ouhted to see hi days, the escapades of his youth Sanin heard frorated to America, to New York; that Gemma had married a merchant; that he, Dönhof, had an acquaintance also a merchant, ould probably know her husband's address, as he did a great deal of business with Aed D&ouht, D&ouht him the address of Gemma's husband, Mr Jeremy Slocum, New York, Broadway, No 501 Only this address dated from the year 1863